N.H. Kindergarten Accord Includes Construction Funds

The promise of new classroom-construction funding in New Hampshire is
prompting school officials across the state to consider adding
kindergarten programs.

"That's going to be the key to get a lot of our districts over the
hump," said Paul Krohne, the director of the New Hampshire School
Boards Association, referring to the legislature's plans to pay 75
percent of the building costs in districts that need school additions
or renovations to launch or expand kindergarten programs.

The compromise bill, agreed upon by a House and Senate conference
committee June 5, would also boost state aid for kindergarten from $500
to $750 per child and add $20 million to the foundation-aid formula for
schools over the next two years, raising fiscal 1998 aid to $65 million
and fiscal 1999 aid to $66 million.

But the bill remained in limbo last week because of end-of-session
procedural problems and last-minute disputes over budget issues.
Legislators hoped to work out their differences and send the bill on to
the governor soon.

Six districts have already voted to add kindergarten programs this
fall, meaning 109 of the state's 154 school systems will offer
kindergarten.

And Helen Schotanus, a state curriculum adviser for primary
education, said several more are considering the move. "Districts that
have never talked about public kindergarten before are now talking
about it," she said.

Statewide, about half of all 5-year-olds attend public kindergarten.
Another 35 percent go to private programs, leaving 15 percent with no
kindergarten experience when they enter 1st grade.

The $750-per-child allocation would cover only about a third of the
cost of a half-day kindergarten program, which is at least $2,000. But
the bill is still "the message that we were looking for," Ms. Krohne
said.

While satisfied with the kindergarten plan, Democratic Gov. Jeanne
Shaheen said last week that she will let the budget bill pass into law
without her signature because of other provisions she doesn't like,
namely tuition increases at state colleges and universities and cuts in
health and human services programs.

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